E&E News: “Americans’ Support for Renewables Plunged in Past Decade—Poll”

This story details the findings of the first report in a series about the views held by Americans about climate change.

View on E&E News website

Date

July 17, 2024

News Type

Media Highlight

Source

E&E News

Large majorities of Americans support renewable energy, but their support for wind and solar power has diminished significantly over the past 11 years even as new laws spur billions of dollars toward low-carbon energy projects, according to a new survey.

Eighty-three percent of Americans support solar energy, down from 91 percent in 2013, and 70 percent of Americans support wind energy, compared to 84 percent in 2013, according to the analysis released Monday from Stanford University and the clean energy group Resources for the Future.

Support for fossil fuels also has fallen. Eighteen percent of Americans now back coal power, down from 21 percent in 2013. Thirty-eight of Americans support natural gas to provide electricity, compared to 48 percent in 2013. The decline in support for wind, solar and gas is statistically significant, according to the research.

Even though support for renewables has fallen, “Americans perceive the Biden administration to be doing more about climate change than they perceived the federal government to be doing at the end of the Trump administration,” the report says. That likely is from passage of laws like the IRA, as well as actions such as rejoining the Paris Agreement, it said.

Related People

Related Content